1 / 41

Smoke-Free Housing Commission Apartments: The Time Is Now

Smoke-Free Housing Commission Apartments: The Time Is Now. NAHRO-Michigan Chapter Fall Conference Bay City, Michigan September 8, 2005. Presenters.

Télécharger la présentation

Smoke-Free Housing Commission Apartments: The Time Is Now

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Smoke-Free Housing Commission Apartments: The Time Is Now

  2. NAHRO-Michigan Chapter Fall ConferenceBay City, Michigan September 8, 2005

  3. Presenters Jim Bergman, J.D., Co-Director, The Center for Social Gerontology, Inc. and Director, Smoke-Free Environments Law Project Ann Arbor, Michigan Dan Peterson, Executive Director, Cadillac Housing Commission, Cadillac, Michigan

  4. Key Points to be Covered • The MISmokeFreeApartment initiative • Why secondhand smoke is an issue • Legal issues & smoke-free apartment policies • Housing authorities/commissions have adopted smoke-free apartment policies in Michigan and in other states; so have many private landlords • Steps you can take to adopt a smoke-free policy • Resources available to assist you • The experience of the Cadillac Housing Commission in adopting its smoke-free policy

  5. Two billboards to set the stage.

  6. Why smoke-free apartments? The time has come, because: • Tenants want smoke-free apartments • Increasing numbers of complaints about secondhand smoke infiltration in apts • Health risks the same as elsewhere • Secondhand smoke cannot be controlled • Good deal for landlords • It’s legal to do

  7. Tenants want smoke-free apts • Healthy Androscoggin in Auburn, Maine surveyed 850 tenants; 76% would choose to live in a smoke-free apartment complex • Twin Cites (MN): random sample survey -- 55% of renters said they had moved or would move from an apartment because of secondhand smoke seepage • California: Survey of 1,800 residents -- 63% said apartment complexes should require at least 50% of units to be smoke-free

  8. Apartment secondhand smoke seepage complaints increase • SFELP now receives more complaints from individuals about secondhand smoke seepage in apartments than any other, including workplaces complaints • Tenants beginning to realize they don’t have to accept this problem • Tenants aware of dangers of secondhand smoke

  9. Why All The Fuss? • Why is there such concern about secondhand smoke in apartments, condominiums and other multi-unit residences?

  10. Secondhand Smoke is Deadly National Institute for Environmental Health Sciences Report, issued May 15, 2000. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency report, issued July, 1993. • It is a Group A carcinogen -- a substance known to cause cancer in humans for which there is no safe level of exposure.

  11. Why Should We Care? • The health dangers of secondhand smoke are NOT any different in residential settings. • If your residence allows smoking, you and your residents are being exposed to serious health risks.

  12. Why Should Landlords Care? • Smoking damages residential property: • Poses fire hazard • Causes cigarette burn damage to carpets, counters, etc • Leaves smoke residue on walls and curtains

  13. Why Should Landlords Care? Secondhand smoke cannot be controlled by ventilation or air cleaning: On June 30, 2005, the American Society of Heating, Refrigerating & Air-Conditioning Engineers (ASHRAE) issued their latest position document on secondhand smoke. It states: “At present, the only means of effectively eliminating health risk associated with indoor exposure is to ban smoking activity.” www.ashrae.org

  14. Why Should Landlords Care? • Complaints from non-smoking tenants about smoke incursions. • Legal action taken against landlords who allow smoking in their buildings.

  15. But . . . • Isn’t smoking a “right?” • No Michigan law prevents smoking in private residences • But nothing stops a landlord from prohibiting smoking on property now • There is no legal right to smoke

  16. In Fact • Tenants negatively impacted by secondhand smoke actually have the right to seek legal actionagainst landlords who do not make adequate provisions to protect them from second hand smoke.

  17. And, the ADA and FHA Say: • Persons cannot be discriminated against in workplaces, public places or in housing due to disability; and, having severe breathing problems constitutes a disability.

  18. And, the ADA and FHA Say: • Therefore, these facilities are required by the ADA and/or FHA (and parallel state statutes) to provide reasonable accommodations to persons with severe breathing disabilities, including possibly making the facility totally smoke-free.

  19. Other legal actions available... Common law remedies tenants may use: • Breach of warranty of habitability and/or breach of warranty of quiet enjoyment • Nuisance law violation • Negligence, harassment, trespass, constructive eviction, intentional infliction of emotional distress, battery • Violations of Housing or Health Codes

  20. So, What Can Landlords Legally Do? • Apartment owners are permitted by federal and state law to adopt total smoke-free policies.

  21. So, What Can Landlords Legally Do? • HUD Legal Counsel letter of July, 2003 states that apartment owners are free under federal law to make their buildings totally smoke-free, so long as they “grandfather” current residents who are smokers. • Grandfathering means for a reasonable period, such as until lease renewal

  22. So, What Can Landlords Legally Do? • Michigan Attorney General Opinion of 1992 states that neither federal nor Michigan law prohibits a landlord from making his/her apartment building totally smoke-free.

  23. So, What Can Landlords Legally Do? • As the HUD Legal Counsel letter stated: “The right to smoke or not to smoke is not a right that is protected under the Civil Rights Act of 1964 because smokers are not a protected class under federal law.”

  24. Adopt New House Rule Language • Use to: • Implement a smoke-free policy in a multiunit dwelling. • Add these provisions to the leases for apartment complexes or to the “house rules” in Housing Commission buildings

  25. Housing Commissions Have Adopted Smoke-Free Policies • Housing Authorities/Commissions elsewhere have adopted smoke-free policies, including in: Seattle, WA; Auburn, ME; Cloquet, MN; Fort Pierce, FL; Kearney, NE; Madera, CA; Ocean City, NJ; Sanford, ME; Santa Barbara, CA; and Cadillac, MI. • Others are considering doing so.

  26. Steps to Take to Adopt a Smoke-Free Policy • Survey Residents: a) Determine which units have smoking & nonsmoking tenants. b) Ask tenants if they would like to live in a smoke-free building, and identify which buildings have the most tenants who want a smoke-free policy. c) Evaluate tenants’ overall views about exposure to secondhand smoke.

  27. Steps to Take to Adopt a Smoke-Free Policy 2) Develop a plan of action: a) Hold a meeting of all tenants to discuss the survey results and to discuss plans to establish a smoke-free policy in some or all buildings. b) Use the meeting to do a presentation on the health hazards of secondhand smoke. c) Select the building(s) that will implement the smoke-free policy first, and select the timing for the policy and what the grandfather period will be.

  28. Steps to Take to Adopt a Smoke-Free Policy • Establish date for Housing Commission Board to discuss and vote on policy: a) Discuss policy with Commission members and determine their views. b) If a majority of Commissioners support smoke-free policy, set date for Board meeting. c) Notify all tenants of Board meeting and intention to discuss and vote on smoke-free policy, following tenant comment period.

  29. Steps to Take to Adopt a Smoke-Free Policy 4) Adopt and implement policy: a) Following tenant and other discussions, vote to adopt smoke-free apartment policy. b) In policy, decide on the length of the “grandfather”period for current smokers. c) In policy, decide whether there will be an outside designated smoking area and where. d) Establish time frame for implementation and notify all tenants.

  30. Steps to Take to Adopt a Smoke-Free Policy 4) Adopt and implement policy: continued e) Include the policy in the “house rules”. f) Post the policy in common areas. g) Hold smoking cessation meetings for smokers. h) Work with tenants to handle complaints as they arise. i) Give violators a set number of warnings prior to starting the eviction process.

  31. You Have Resources SFELP is available to assist you with: • Consultations throughout the process of adopting a smoke-free policy; at no cost to you. • Written analyses of the policy and legal issues. • Research on what has been done elsewhere. • Setting up conference calls with other housing directors who have adopted smoke-free policies. • In-person presentations. • Drafting a smoke-free policy. • Assistance on implementation issues.

  32. You Have Resources Online MISmokeFreeApartment web site: www.mismokefreeapartment.org Smoke-free Environments Law Project site: www.tcsg.org/sfelp/home.htm SFELP Apartments/Condos site: www.tcsg.org/sfelp/apartment.htm

  33. To contact SFELP • www.mismokefreeapartment.org • Smoke-Free Environments Law Projectwww.tcsg.org/sfelp/home.htm • Phone: 734 665-1126 • Smoke-Free Environments Law Project The Center for Social Gerontology, Inc. 2307 Shelby Avenue Ann Arbor, Michigan 48103

  34. Smoke-free Apartment Decal

  35. Smoke-free apartment listing • mismokefreeapartment.org web site includes a listing of smoke-free apartments: www.mismokefreeapartment.org/listing.html • SFELP has compiled the list of smoke-free apartments in coordination with local tobacco reduction coalitions, health departments, apartment associations, & others

  36. Smoke-free apartment listing sitewww.mismokefreeapartment.org/listing.html

More Related